'Dams and Development' - the Report of the WCD About the WCD Knowledge Base Press Releases, Newsletters, Media Reports, Events
Home Page
Press Releases  / In the Media /  Newsletters  / Speeches  / Events  / Calendar /  Non-English  
       WCD in the Media
       [Media Items Contents]
Home  
 
   Related:
Archive of
WCD Press Releases
Archive of WCD Media Coverage
 

Report criticises dams for human, environment cost

Daily News, Sri Lanka - 18 November 2000

Report criticises dams for human, environment cost
LONDON, Friday (Reuters) Dams have delivered major benefits to more than 140 countries but have exacted a high price in human hardship and environmental damage, experts said on Thursday.

A new report by the World Commission on Dams, an independent body sponsored by the World Bank and the World Conservation Union (IUCN), calls for a new approach to planning and building dams that takes into account the needs and desires of people.

"This report provides answers and solutions," former South African president Nelson Mandela, invited to unveil the document, said at the launch in London.

At 400 pages and two years in the making, the report is the first independent, systematic assessment of large dams around the world.

While extolling their power, water and farming benefits, the report concludes that in many cases fewer people might have been displaced, more livelihoods salvaged and the loss of fish and birds might have been avoided if large dams had been better planned.

"The report is vigorous without being rigorous," Kader Asmal, the chairman of the commission, told a news conference.

"It shows how nations can make the best development decisions every time."

Achim Steiner, the secretary general of the World Commission on Dams (WCD), said the most fundamental negative finding was the systematic failure to account fully for the social impact dams have had on communities they displaced and on those downstream from them.

"We estimate there are about 40-80 million people that have been displaced by dams. You are talking about a very significant number of people," Steiner said in an interview.

The 12-member commission which includes representatives from industry, dam owners, governments and environmentalists, also found that many dams are run inefficiently, involve cost overruns and have led to accidents and the loss of flood plains, forests, fisheries and wildlife.

The commission recommends that large dam projects should only be approved if they meet a framework and guidelines, set out in the report, that recognise the rights of and assess the risks to all interested parties.

The World Bank welcomed the report and said it firmly believes in the process of reaching out and encouraging dialogue.

"Dams offer huge benefits but sometimes at a large cost. The Bank is currently funding less than one percent of dam projects worldwide within strict environmental and social guidelines," World Bank President James Wolfensohn said in a statement.

Home  /  Search  /  Site Map  /  Contact Us  /  Links

Copyright © 1999, 2000 The World Commission on Dams